Call of Duty: Warzone Mobile is officially finished. Activision has taken the game’s servers permanently offline today, April 17, 2026, ending access less than two years after its global launch in March 2024. As of now, Warzone Mobile can no longer be played.
Activision signaled the shutdown well in advance. In early 2025, the company announced it would wind the game down, explaining that Warzone Mobile didn’t resonate with mobile-first players the way Call of Duty’s PC and console experiences have.
The decline happened in stages, and most players saw the exit coming. Real-money purchases were turned off on May 19, 2025. Around the same time, Warzone Mobile was removed from both the Google Play Store and Apple’s App Store, stopping new players from downloading it through official channels. Anyone who already had it installed could keep playing, but the game effectively entered a long holding pattern. Seasonal content drops and meaningful gameplay updates had already stopped, leaving the community with a static version of the experience until today’s final server shutdown.
With the servers now offline, guest accounts that were used to access Warzone Mobile are no longer accessible. Players who linked an Activision account aren’t losing that account, though—it remains active and can still be used across other Activision games and services.
There’s also a major cutoff regarding in-game currency and purchases. Any unused COD Points that weren’t spent before the shutdown are now gone for good. Activision has confirmed it will not issue refunds for unused points or previously purchased in-game content. Players were previously encouraged to spend remaining COD Points in the in-game store before today, but that window has closed.
For players looking for a new place to land, Activision is pushing the audience toward Call of Duty: Mobile, which is still live and continues to receive seasonal updates. It offers multiple modes, including Battle Royale, Multiplayer, Zombies, and an extraction-style option called DMZ: Recon. Activision also emphasized that Call of Duty: Warzone remains free to play on PC and console.
Warzone Mobile’s shutdown highlights a familiar reality in live-service mobile gaming: even big-name franchises can struggle to maintain long-term engagement on phones, especially when competing against entrenched mobile staples. In the end, Warzone Mobile’s run lasted a little over two years from global launch to permanent closure.






